Join Students for Justice in Palestine for a conversation with Professors Steven Salaita and Katherine Franke, moderated by Professor Corey Robin, about Academic Freedom in the context of conversations about Palestine/Israel and the constant push by Zionists to silence academic discourse relating to the Palestinian struggle and criticisms of Israel. Co-sponsored by: Brooklyn College Political Science Department Brooklyn College Sociology Department Brooklyn College Secondary Education Department Brooklyn College Philosophy Department Brooklyn College Puerto Rican and Latino Studies Department The Shirley Chisholm Project Brooklyn For Peace Jewish Voice for Peace NY-Chapter International Socialist Organization (ISO) *“Co-sponsorship does not imply agreement with, or support of, views expressed at a student-hosted event.” Thursday, November 20, 2014 6PM to 8:30PM Doors open at 5:30pm! Event will start promptly at 6pm. BC Student Center - 6th Floor - GOLD ROOM Refreshments will be served! OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!! ALL MUST RSVP BELOW - http://SJP1120.eventbrite.com/ Event Description: On 1 August, Professor Steven Salaita was fired from a tenured position at University of Illinois Urbana Champaign less than a month before he was scheduled to teach his first class there. He had resigned from his tenured position at Virginia Tech, rented out his home in Blacksburg, Virginia for the year, and was finalizing the purchase of a condo in Illinois. A Palestinian-American who writes regularly for The Electronic Intifada, Salon, and other popular media outlets, Salaita is also a respected professor of literature and Indigenous Studies, the author of numerous academic books and essays, and by all accounts, a beloved teacher. Like all candidates for tenured positions, Salaita had gone through a rigorous hiring process by faculty before being offered the job at UIUC in October 2013. But beginning on 21 July, the UIUC Chancellor, Phyllis Wise, began receiving a steady stream of emails from wealthy donors to the University protesting the hiring of Steven Salaita. They were opposed to Salaita because of his ardent positions on Palestine and Zionism--ostensibly because of his unrepentant and forceful denunciation of Israel’s 51-day assault on Gaza as communicated via Twitter--and threatened to withhold their largesse if Salaita joined the faculty. Baher Azmy, a lawyer with the Center for Constitutional Rights who has represented Salaita since he was fired, told Alternet that the lawsuit they are now putting together will rest on two claims: one, that the University officials deprived Salaita of his First Amendment rights to to speak on a matter of public concern; and two, that the University unlawfully terminated a contract, which had the guarantees of lifetime tenure. About the Speakers: Steven Salaita is an associate professor of English at Virginia Tech. He is the author of six books and writes frequently about Arab Americans, Palestine, Indigenous Peoples, and decolonization. His current book project is entitled Images of Arabs and Muslims in the Age of Obama. Katherine Franke is the Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, where she directs the Center for Gender and Sexuality Law. She was awarded a 2011 Guggenheim Fellowship, and is among the nation's leading scholars in the area of feminism, sexuality and race. In addition to her scholarly writing on sexual harassment, gender equality, sexual rights, and racial history, Franke is also on the Executive Committee for Columbia's Institute for Research on Women and Gender, and the Center for Palestine Studies and teaches at a medium security women's prison in Manhattan. About the Moderator: Corey Robin is a professor of political science at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. He is the author of Fear: The History of a Political Idea and The Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edmund Burke to Sarah Palin. His articles have appeared in the American Political Science Review, Social Research, the London Review of Books, Harper’s, The New York Times and The Nation. Join Students for Justice in Palestine and allies for a discussion on the very real ways Israel is involved in repression and oppression worldwide. Through this discussion, we will bring to light the connections between the struggles of peoples worldwide, and the reality of the common oppressor: Israel, and oppressive imperial/colonial powers like it. Brooklyn College Student Center E27th St & Campus RD Brooklyn, NY GOLD ROOM - 6th Floor 6:00pm - 8:30pm Refreshments will be served! This event is FREE and open to the public. ALL MUST RSVP BELOW: http://sjp102814.eventbrite.com/ Please note that this includes Brooklyn College students and faculty. Guests who do not RSVP at the provided link cannot be guaranteed access to the event. For any questions, media requests, or to cosponsor this event, please contact us at [email protected]om CO-SPONSORED BY: BC Puerto Rican Alliance (PRA) Caribbean Student Union (CSU) NAACP at Brooklyn College Black Student Union (SBU) Description: Israel has collaborated with many of the most repressive regimes and forces on all continents, arming Apartheid South Africa, colonial and neo-colonial regimes in the Middle East, dictators in Central and South America and police forces in the United States. Speakers: Sara Kershnar, founder of the International Jewish Anti Zionist Network (IJAN). Ms. Kershnar is a distinguished organizer with a long track record of grassroots activism. She started organising with ACT-UP in San Francisco when her father tested positive for HIV. She is also co-founder of the Harm Reduction Coalition - founded to build a movement to reduce drug-related harm and to confront and transform the racism and class oppression that is at the root of harmful drug use; and also a co-founder of Generation FIVE, an organization that works to end child sexual abuse in a liberatory rather than reactionary way. Linda Tigani, organizer with the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement/People’s Self-Defense Campaign Sharif Zakout, activist and youth coordinator for Arab Resource and Organizing Center (AROC) and a member of the Palestine Youth Movement (PYM)-US branch. A sneak peak of last week's "Day of Dignity" where we marched alongside Puerto Rican Alliance (PRA), Movimiento Estudiantil Dominicano (MEDo), Haitian American Student Association (HASA), The DREAM Team, Latin Women and allies to remembered our ancestors who were murdered, raped and whose lands were stolen by colonialism and to protest the celebration of columbus day. To exist is to resist. Stay tuned for more awesome events this semester! Check out more pics in our pictures page
Students for Justice in Palestine and allies at Brooklyn College hosted a great art exhibition "Boycott! The Art of Economic Activism Exhibit."
This exhibition uses powerful posters to demonstrate the effectiveness of boycotts as a nonviolent tactic to end injustice and oppression. Come learn about the rich history of boycotts in many social movements. http://afsc.org/boycott/ Students for Justice in Palestine and allies at Brooklyn College are excited and proud to announce the opening of a great art exhibition "Boycott! The Art of Economic Activism Exhibit." This exhibition uses powerful posters to demonstrate the effectiveness of boycotts as a nonviolent tactic to end injustice and oppression. Come learn about the rich history of boycotts in many social movements. Dates: Sept 29th - Oct 3rd Every day during common hours 12-2pm Brooklyn College Student Center SUBO MONDAY Sept 29th - Bedford Lounge 2nd floor TUESDAY Sept 30th - Club Room (lower level) WEDNESDAY Oct 1st - Maroon Room 6th floor THURSDAY Oct 2nd - Bedford Lounge 2nd floor FRIDAY Oct 3rd - Bedford Lounge 2nd floor Everyone is welcome!!! Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/860982040580281/ About the Exhibition The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) and the Center for the Study of Political Graphics (CSPG) have created a traveling poster exhibition highlighting diverse historical boycott movements from the 1950s to the present. "Boycott! The Art of Economic Activism," features 58 posters from more than 20 boycotts, including the Montgomery Bus Boycott, United Farm Workers' grape and lettuce boycott, divestment from South Africa to protest Apartheid, boycotts of corporations using sweatshops, the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divest and Sanctions (BDS), and many others. Activists and solidarity groups have often responded to injustices by implementing boycott and divestment campaigns targeting companies and governments that support and sustain these injustices- and posters have been a primary tool for educating about the issues and inspiring people to action. http://afsc.org/boycott/ From Ferguson to Palestine, racism, injustice and human rights violations are being committed against oppressed people.
SJP at BC and allies held a Die In for the people of Gaza and a moment of Silence for the victims of police brutality, the latest being Eric Garner and Mike Brown. September 2nd, 2014 Dear Students, Allies, and Friends, We are excited to announce that the 2014 National Students for Justice in Palestine Conference will take place on October 24-26th at Tufts University! This year’s conference is themed Beyond Solidarity: Resisting Racism and Colonialism from the U.S. to Palestine. At last year’s conference at Stanford University, From Margin to Center: Connecting Struggles, Forging a National Movement, we concluded with a panel on joint struggle. The term “joint struggle” represents the work of acting together to resist the systems that oppress our respective communities–sometimes in ways that overlap and other times in ways that are very specific. Joint struggle means that a victory for one group should also strengthen and advance the movements we are connected with. It comes from an understanding that oppression will never cease to exist for a group unless all oppressed groups are free. For the members of the National SJP steering committee, we have appreciated the solidarity we have received nationally from groups like MEChA and Anakbayan, and we hope to build on both new and existing relationships. The summer’s events in Palestine and across the U.S., specifically in Ferguson, have clearly shown the connections between racist and colonial oppression in both locations, sparking transnational solidarity and consciousness raising. It is in the spirit of forming a stronger global movement to liberate all peoples that we dedicate this year’s conference to not only strengthening solidarity, but moving from expressing it with words to expressing it by committing to self-education and concrete joint action. In addition to the theme described above, this year’s conference will focus on building our movement through political and skills development, as well as critical discussions about our work and role in the struggle for the liberation of Palestine. The 2014 National SJP Conference will aim to achieve the following goals:
We hope to see you at Tufts! In solidarity, The National Students for Justice in Palestine Steering Committee |
OFFICIAL PAGE OF SJP AT BROOKLYN COLLEGE
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